2 Poems
After Natalie Diaz
—My mother says, where are you going every night?
Someone is going to kill you one of these days.
—I lose my voice in his apartment: it is a tiny basement I find myself coughing in,
cramped with potatoes and space heaters, suffocated by a bonfire of smoky butterflies.
—My mother wonders why my phone keeps blowing up
with voicemail from centaurs and scream queens, and I have no explanation for why the roaches keep snowing out of my backpack.
I thought you were classier than that. Isn’t he making you breakfast?
—I keep dancing around her questions about test results and SSRI prescriptions,
why all the batteries in the house stop working, why I keep rationing so much light,
and why bags black as hawthorn berries bloom under my eyes
when I squirt obsidian ketchup onto a plate.
Dear Mom, you’re making me miserable…
—Like my sister, she keeps brushing my scalp with its hair of dead sparrows
and sucks on my cuticles full of dirt. I never tell her I’ve been spending time
in graveyards looking for the single pomme seed, the small red clue.
In my room she finds nothing but penis candles, unused condoms, and benzene.
—I retain a sensitivity to fridge lights, to needles, to pinpricks,
to all her jokes when she cracks her head back to laugh, a grackle in graying weather.
—She picks through my love notes; I never know how to hide them.
Then lines my room with extinguishers in case I arrive every night with nipples
wreathed in flames and she has to douse them.